He firmly rejected the residential tower block then in vogue and called on architecture to address social and urban issues. |
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Treatments in vogue included horseback riding for pulmonary tuberculosis, and a decoction of carrots for jaundice. |
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Panache provides the women folk nostalgic images by reviving the art of handmade jewellery as they are now not in vogue. |
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The cocktail was back in vogue, Broadway was booming, and new restaurants and nightclubs were opening every week. |
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However, he said, as part of the Government's commitment to urban generation, parks were in vogue again. |
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Wall Street has a retro '80s look these days with buyouts and takeovers back in vogue. |
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The designer's collection for this season has chiffons, georgettes, and voiles along with cotton, which is always in vogue. |
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Preservation of old growth forest wasn't in vogue at the time, according to Graham. |
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You try to concentrate on learning pertinent facts and are aware that what is now in vogue will eventually become dated. |
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Trends in gardening come and go, but individuality and aesthetics will always be in vogue. |
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Then all of a sudden the dot-bomb dropped, and suddenly medical devices and biologics were back in vogue. |
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The combination of gold with creative materials, colourful precious stones and semi-precious stones is also very much in vogue. |
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The military coup may be a thing of the past, but the popular coup is in vogue. |
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So do I take it that at the launch of the Virdi inquiry very much that training was in vogue but now it has filtered off, or dwindled off? |
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However, mothers and grannies of the bride need not be alarmed, as wraps, boleros and capes are very much in vogue for the service at least. |
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Aside from all the sakes, you can also dizzy yourself with shochu, the fierce Japanese vodka drink, which is newly in vogue in Tokyo. |
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Confusing films may be in vogue, but confusing does NOT equal incomprehensible. |
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Popsicle sticks are still in vogue, as are styrofoam, garden hose tubing, particle board, wire and glitter glue. |
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We also had scones, crumpets, sandwiches, and tea for our afternoon and high teas, which were currently in vogue with Caurian ladies. |
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Babi, a city-based designer, says embellished lowers, including salwars and churidars are in vogue in the city. |
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The cholos baptized their clubs in Spanish, just because the banda was in vogue. |
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You know, I remember when meat loaf came back as some comfort food and blackened everything was in vogue. |
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The empire line is back in vogue after several decades, but it has always been a great style to flatter any figure. |
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Extravagantly romantic lace, ribbons, tie-backs and bows will also be very much in vogue. |
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This farrago of nonsense requires a very high standard of stylised comedy acting, which is not in vogue in the 21st Century. |
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A clerk announces that Candide will not be given a proper burial if he doesn't accept the religious practices in vogue at the time. |
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However, economic history withstood the number-crunching cliometricians, and the narrative style is back in vogue. |
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An hobo bag made out of cotton and leather patches for a vintage style that is very in vogue. |
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She operated at a time when eugenic arguments were very much in vogue, harnessed by both sides of the birth-control debate. |
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This season, the unadorned look is more in vogue than ever in France. |
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A number of years ago, a fad called Rubik's cube was in vogue. |
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Understandably, the most talented want to follow Grierson's tradition of one-off, authored films, rather than the kind of docusoaps and reality TV currently in vogue. |
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Official records, opened in 1990 when glasnost was still in vogue, show that Stalin had every intention of treating the Poles as political prisoners. |
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Their bluish light is completely in vogue, has a cool look, and thrills bikers all over the world. And it's easy on the eyes too. |
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While the verse is meant to be highly poetic, it is willingly convoluted, cultivating a certain abstruseness in vogue at the time. |
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Many of the newer dances evolved from the French quadrilles, very much in vogue at that time. |
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But ponchos and capes are back in vogue too as well as oversize batwing or kimono jumpers, and they should give us all a bit of a break from the trim, belted look. |
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A silver trendy in vogue color for this little enamel star locket which embellishes the 45 cm long chain. |
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Moreover, institutions, along with concepts from the new microeconomics such as bounded rationality and imperfect information, are now in vogue, which is all to the good. |
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There seems to be an idea in vogue that you can have an armed gendarmerie go over into peaceful situations and they'll do just fine. |
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Maybe you don't know this nickname, but it is the one of a Dj and producer in vogue in the world of electronic music. |
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Its shape exemplifies the Eastlake style, a movement of English origin in vogue in North America at the end of the 19th century. |
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I firmly believe that regulation of compensation is not appropriate, even though it is in vogue. |
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Does a contractor tend to use the very newest roofing materials, or does he predominantly stick with what was in vogue 10 years ago? |
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He also enjoyed some success with recordings themed on exotic South Seas locales, a genre of popular music that was in vogue in those years. |
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If there is any word in vogue in current European public debate, it is reform. |
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Historical films, which are in vogue at the moment, serve a useful purpose in education. |
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Later, at school in the fifties, G.K. Chesterton was very much in vogue. |
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Combinations inspired by Hispanic dessert and flavor favorites such as dulce de leche, tres leche, sopapillas and churros also are in vogue, says Taylor. |
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This fashion is actively supported by clothing designers who specifically design boxer shorts or thongs to sit above the very low-cut pants in vogue right now. |
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Because of rapid growth in wine consumption, it is also critically important for vintners to be able to meet the market demand for varieties that are currently in vogue. |
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Nowadays, with e-commerce in vogue, flowers, cards and all sorts of gifts can be purchased and dispatched through a wireless network to the other part of the world. |
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Commercial property is also back in vogue with UK fund managers. |
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In the late '80s, the miniskirt became very stylish, and nowadays, clothes that expose the shoulders, the back and sometimes the belly are in vogue. |
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Of course, we also got lucky because what we do is in vogue at the moment. |
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Bellbottoms, beads and long hair will be back in vogue for a night of hippie nostalgia in the Ridgepool Hotel on Saturday night week next, October 30th. |
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When extreme ascetism was in vogue in the patristic period you had nutcases like Phibionites outside the Church and watered down nuts for ascetism like Tertullian within. |
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Wise young chanteuses seem to be very much in vogue right now. |
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Outlining the trends of this season, Manu says long and short jacket in pastel shades with light embroidery are in vogue with bright electric ones for the flamboyant. |
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It would seem then that parliamentarism, a basic principle of the system of values that has been so much in vogue in recent weeks, is not too highly rated at the moment. |
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It has sown doubts and confusion over the European project and even created a mood of pessimism and cynicism that sometimes appears to be in vogue. |
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Theirs was a tenacity to continue to confront and challenge the hierarchization of labor, which remains very much in vogue. |
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The style then in vogue was artificial, declamatory, and statuesque, and its leading exponent, John Philip Kemble, was an actor of classic good looks, imposing figure, and vocal eloquence. |
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In recent years, European designer boutiques have supplanted Vietnamese stores in downtown Saigon, where characterless contemporary architecture is in vogue. |
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For the end of the year, Jacquet is proposing a culinary blend that is well-known and in vogue with its ginger bread canapes to accompany goose or duck liver pate. |
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After a bitter election season, bipartisanship and comity are in vogue. |
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Consequently it is essential that we devote a little time, as unionists and as organisations, to examining the ideas currently in vogue and to improving and expressing our own ideas. |
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A group of colours will be in vogue for a period of 10 to 12 years. |
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He asked the Lieutenant Governor to preside in person over the first Cabinet meeting, a practice not heavily in vogue since the era of Responsible Government. |
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It continued being a fashionable city in vogue right into the early 20th century. |
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Some of us can still remember a time when junior colleges were actually in vogue. |
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These were much in vogue in the United States and Canada. Formulated in laymen's language, they explained the causes of common ailments, gave remedy recipes and offered tips for maintaining good health. |
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The practice of segregating children based primarily on their parents' circumstances is curiously out of step with the ideas of equity and social cohesion that are currently in vogue. |
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Everything from muted colours that are so much in vogue, to the creams and khakis right through to very vibrant wonderful florals that are almost tropical. |
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Because, contrary to the stingily lyrical withdrawal in vogue today-and we all know to what extent politics supplies it with alibis and supposedly objective safeguards-what is intended here is an epic regime. |
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He thinks he has invariably noticed, that amongst primitive nations, zoolatry has been more in vogue than antholatry. |
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The later Service Book of the Antiochian Archdiocese, in vogue today, also uses the King James Version. |
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Between the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660 and the end of the 17th century, classical ideas were in vogue. |
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Rod Anker, Creative Director of Monsoon Salon and Spa, said that up-style was always in vogue and now that it's warmer, one should do it more often. |
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Although Dicer enzyme have been well characterized in human and plants but reports on bovine Dicer1 sequence and expression as well as its evolutionary studies are in vogue. |
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Composed in the 1920s, when Erik Satie and Dadaist ideas about art were much in vogue, the opera lives on the borderline between childhood fantasy and campy surrealism. |
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Although ES cells are currently in vogue, unresolved ethical issues and problems of rejection and canceration remain major hurdles to their clinical use. |
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